As a spineless, pompous ass who still needs his mother to wake him
in the morning, the Vice President is a perfect fit for his job description (though I am
in no way implying that all vice presidents are ass
holes... except maybe Spiro Agnew and Dick Cheney),
since real
life VPs don't have much to do outside of looking pretty and not saying anything stupid.
Reproduced: Norbert Lynton, «Barbara Hepworth», Arts Review, vol.13, no. 11, 3 - 17 June 1961, p. 13 Mary Watson, «Sea Inspires the Sculptress», Auckland Star, July 1962 Owen Broughton, «The Technique of Recent British Sculpture», Bulletin of the National Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, April 1963 (unpag., installation) «Fascinating, horrifying and sensual», China Mail, Hong Kong, 17 Aug. 1964 Denis Farr, British Sculpture
Since 1945, 1965, pl.4 «Works of Eminent British Sculptors on View», Times of India, Delhi, 17 Nov. 1965 J.P. Hodin, «Vom Stil der Barbara Hepworth: Zuden Arbeiten der englischen Bildhauerin», Die Kunst and das Schöne Heim, vol.64, no. 7, April 1966, p. 276 Keith Roberts, «London», Burlington Magazine, vol.110, no. 782, Aug. 1966, p. 301 A.M. Hammacher, Modern English Sculpture, 1967, p. 86 (
in col.) Guy Burn, «Hepworth», Arts Review, vol.20, no. 7, 3 April 1968, p. 184 Christopher Neve, «
Holes in a Sculptor's Landscape: Barbara Hepworth», Country
Life, vol.143, no. 3710, 11 April 1968, pp. 887 Bijutsu Techo, Japanese monthly mag., Aug. 1970, p. 3 Cross 1984, p. 114, pl.70 (
in col.) Lesley Jackson, The New Look: Design
in the Fifties, Manchester, 1991, p. 56 Michael Tooby, An Illustrated Companion to the Tate St Ives, 1993, p. 13 Andrew Causey, «Liverpool and New Haven: Barbara Hepworth», Burlington Magazine, vol.136, no. 1101, Dec. 1994, pp.860 - 1, p. 860